4,547 research outputs found
Characteristic Functions Describing the Power Absorption Response of Periodic Structures to Partially Coherent Fields
Many new types of sensing or imaging surfaces are based on periodic thin
films. It is explained how the response of those surfaces to partially coherent
fields can be fully characterized by a set of functions in the wavenumber
spectrum domain. The theory is developed here for the case of 2D absorbers with
TE illumination and arbitrary material properties in the plane of the problem,
except for the resistivity which is assumed isotropic. Sum and difference
coordinates in both spatial and spectral domains are conveniently used to
represent the characteristic functions, which are specialized here to the case
of periodic structures. Those functions can be either computed or obtained
experimentally. Simulations rely on solvers based on periodic-boundary
conditions, while experiments correspond to Energy Absorption Interferometry
(EAI), already described in the literature. We derive rules for the convergence
of the representation versus the number of characteristic functions used, as
well as for the sampling to be considered in EAI experiments. Numerical
examples are given for the case of absorbing strips printed on a semi-infinite
substrate.Comment: Submitted to JOSA
Time Diary Measures of Investment in Young Children
There is a rising importance of human capital in the total capital stock of an economy. In this paper we discuss the nature of investments in children and sketch out the diverse kinds of inputs to the developmental process across different countries at selected time points. The observable inputs are time and goods and they can arise both in the home and in formal care settings. Estimates are given for Sweden and the U.S. The mere size of the total of these investments in early human capital, more than 20 percent of GDP for Sweden, raises a number of interesting questions.
Characterization of Power Absorption Response of Periodic 3D Structures to Partially Coherent Fields
In many applications of absorbing structures it is important to understand
their spatial response to incident fields, for example in thermal solar panels,
bolometric imaging and controlling radiative heat transfer. In practice, the
illuminating field often originates from thermal sources and is only spatially
partially coherent when reaching the absorbing device. In this paper, we
present a method to fully characterize the way a structure can absorb such
partially coherent fields. The method is presented for any 3D material and
accounts for the partial coherence and partial polarization of the incident
light. This characterization can be achieved numerically using simulation
results or experimentally using the Energy Absorption Interferometry (EAI) that
has been described previously in the literature. The absorbing structure is
characterized through a set of absorbing functions, onto which any partially
coherent field can be projected. This set is compact for any structure of
finite extent and the absorbing function discrete for periodic structures
The Age Evolution of the Radio Morphology of Supernova Remnants
Recent hydrodynamical models of supernova remnants (SNRs) demonstrate that
their evolution depends heavily on the inhomogeneities of the surrounding
medium. As SNRs expand, their morphologies are influenced by the non-uniform
and turbulent structure of their environments, as reflected in their radio
continuum emission. In this paper, we measure the asymmetries of 96 SNRs in
radio continuum images from three surveys of the Galactic plane and compare
these results to the SNRs' radii, which we use as a proxy for their age. We
find that larger (older) SNRs are more elliptical/elongated and more mirror
asymmetric than smaller (younger) SNRs, though the latter vary in their degrees
of asymmetry. This result suggests that SNR shells become more asymmetric as
they sweep up the interstellar medium (ISM), as predicted in hydrodynamical
models of SNRs expanding in a multi-phase or turbulent ISM.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, accepted by ApJ; sample expanded from 22 to 96
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Additive Factors Do Not Imply Discrete Processing Stages: A Worked Example Using Models of the Stroop Task
Previously, it has been shown experimentally that the psychophysical law known as PiĂ©ronâs Law holds for color intensity and that the size of the effect is additive with that of Stroop condition (Stafford et al., 2011). According to the additive factors method (Donders, 1868â1869/1969; Sternberg, 1998), additivity is assumed to indicate independent and discrete processing stages. We present computational modeling work, using an existing Parallel Distributed Processing model of the Stroop task (Cohen et al., 1990) and a standard model of decision making (Ratcliff, 1978). This demonstrates that additive factors can be successfully accounted for by existing single stage models of the Stroop effect. Consequently, it is not valid to infer either discrete stages or separate loci of effects from additive factors. Further, our modeling work suggests that information binding may be a more important architectural property for producing additive factors than discrete stages
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